Physics, asked by menakshi2254, 1 year ago

Does time stand still at a phase transition?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
5
Héy Héllø!

So, thé answer is --) This suggests that these KSM 'rules' for how matter will behave across space time during a continuous phase transition will be applicable to all physical systems - whether that's caesium gas atoms or the early Universe. ... "Rather it is about how complex structure is developed through a transition.

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Answered by Anonymous
0
Hey mate ^_^

In the types of system in which second-order phase transitions are studied, forces are generally short range.

This means that the other scales you mention will be finite in size.

However, at the critical point the correlation length diverges, which means it becomes effectively infinite.

If you look at the system on larger and larger scales, any finite scale will eventually become a microscopic detail, and the system's behaviour becomes dominated by the scale-free critical point behaviour.

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